Question Regarding Hurricanes/Lightning & The Leak

I haven't seen this posted anywhere, but it could very well be nested within another post and I wasn't able to locate it. If that's the case, I
apologize.

I was just reading about hurricanes sweeping through the Gulf, and it got me wondering about something. When the first hurricane of the season blows
in, is there any chance that the lightning could ignite the gas that has been released as a result of the oil leak? And if so, anyone have any idea
how much of the gas could be ignited?

It's probably nothing major to worry about, but I'm really curious about whether or not we could see some unusual phenomena as a result of having
potentially flammable substances swirling around the eye of a hurricane.

obviously there are quite a few variables, but generally speaking in a perfect system that is only composed of oxygen and methane gas the
concentration of methane would need to be 5-15%. Anything lower than five is too lean and higher than 15 is too rich.

So, for lightning to ignite the air over the gulf would require a lot of methane to be present in the atmosphere. I would suppose that if that were
the current case currently then the controlled burns they are doing would ignite the methane in the air.

However, if there were to be a massive release of natural gas and you have a hurricane come through a "perfect storm" of events could conceivable
occur. As other threads have alluded to the phase change from ice to liquid to gas of methane moving from the sea floor to the atmosphere has a lot
of variables (pressure, temperature, and volume) that have to be taken into account as well.

It would depend upon whether the storm tracks over a highly charged patch of water.

Some areas have been tested at 1 million times normal amount of methane. If the wind churns those waters and releases the gas to the air...who knows?
Maybe we'll see a hurricane spit fireballs, after all.

I'm more concerned that the gases will be blown ashore in concentrations high enough to cause deaths of small animals and the very young and very
old.

Originally posted by apacheman
I'm more concerned that the gases will be blown ashore in concentrations high enough to cause deaths of small animals and the very young and very
old.

i agree with this... it is always the less glamorous alternative that gets you. In fact, if your scenario were to develop into something more serious
with plant life on land dying off due to the gas concentrations or something along those lines... we then may wish a giant fireball had just
incinerated us all.

You don't need a hurricane over the Gulf to get lightning. Thunderstorms are nearly an everyday activity this time of year. What might be more
interesting to see is a funnel cloud (waterspout) suck up a large amount of oil and THAT be ignited with a lightning stroke.

Thanks for the replies. I feel silly having not thought of thunderstorms accomplishing the same thing with lightning. I guess this is going to be a
simple matter of wait and see. Let's hope for the best, for our sake and for the sake of nature and all other living things.

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